You thought Antenora was bad? You ain't seen nothing yet. Introducing Blaid Drugg, a language that makes Brainfuck make sense. The number type is base 2-7i+j-8k integer-coefficent quaternions. The language has many such wonderful features as:A confusing manualMisleading, frightengly inaccurate documentationViolation of the universeA data structure that may or may not be a queue at any moment in timeA general state of commotionText in the original digital font: BrailleUser defined EVERYTHING

Forget everything you thought you knew about Blaid Drugg, here's the official specs of the Blaid Drugg interpreted language.All numbers are 16-bit two's complement signed integers.Memory is allocated in 768-byte pages with Get(N where N can be any single char that'll fit into an appvar name.There are two more 768-byte structures, one of which is the operating space, accessed via 9-bit pointers (The "houses" are 16-bits wide), and the other is the stack. Note that anything that goes off the end of the stack does not come back. Commands:

{ overwrites the data in the operating space with the data in the last-GetCalc'd page! exchanges the data in the operating space with the last-GetCalc'd page} overwrites the data in the last GetCalc'd page with the data in the operating spaceA 1 or 0 anywhere in the program causes the interpreter to read the next eight bytes in the program, access that word in the operating space, push it onto the stack, and resume interpretation at the end of the pointer, unless proceeded by a ->-> reads the next nine bytes in the program, uses them as a pointer, and pops the top number in the stack and puts it in the operating space at the pointed to address.(-) [negative] adds one to the top number of the stack.If reads the top number in the stack and, if nonzero, continues execution as normal, 16 bytes later. If the top number is 0, however, the interpreter reads those following sixteen bytes, turns them into a pointer, and jumps to that byte in the program.. deletes top number of stack.Linebreaks are for cowardsAnything not recognized by the interpreter is a noop, but be aware that two-byte tokes may caue weird things to happen

The following commands operate on the top two numbers of the stack:+ pushes their sum- [minus] pushes their difference* pushes their signed product/ pushes their signed quotiento pushes their bitwise NANDr pushes their bitwise NOR? pushes their bitwise XOR, swaps them.

Blaid drugg doesn't require the programmer to find launch a difficult pre-image attack on the language just to program in it like Antenora does. Also, Antenora immediately causes a RAM clear (I would have gone with an explosion, but newer calculators don't come with C4 wired in to the chip) whenever it encounters an unsupported instruction.